- Compressibility – ability to compact under force or load. Quartz sand vs clay. More compaction = less permeability.
- Shrink-swell – Soil expands or swells when wet and shrinks with dry. “Expanding clays.” Can put lots of pressure upon structures, buildings, utility lines, underground pipes.
- Used for commercial products; seals in well casings
- Ion exchange capacity – process by which dissolved ions attach to soil particles
Soil as a Resource - Agricultural food production
- Soil fertility
- Essential nutrients – N, P, K, Ca, Mg, S
- Minerals and energy
- Aluminum – result from weathering of igneous rock
- Kaolinite clay – soft, fine grained, commercial products
- Peat – organic rich, can be dried and used as fuel, gardening mulch
- Phosphorous for use as fertilizer
Soil Loss - Soil erosion – movement of soil particles away from their place of origin
- Natural – rain and wind
- Man-made – human activities accelerate erosion process
- Consequences – loss of nutrients, top soil, sediment pollution downstream or downslope
- See Figure 10.27 page 317
Soil Loss - Mitigation
- Contour plowing
- Crop stripping
- No till farming
- Grassed waterways
- Terracing
Salinization of Soils Hardpans
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